Shapeshifter. Empath. Thief. In rain-swept Vancouver, Canada, Jaymee Gray plies her craft and avoids the men whose desires can physically reshape her into the woman they want. When a job goes horribly wrong and a woman dies, it sets off a breakneck adventure where Jaymee meets David Corbin, perhaps the only man who desires her as she is, at the same time as a killer destroys every woman he touches. His next victim?
Jaymee.
Karen L. Abrahamson hits a knockout punch of an urban fantasy with a strong, sassy heroine and a strong romantic hero anyone could love. Mutable Things takes a smart sideways look at the impact of desires on all of our lives. For heat, for action and characters you can love, enter the rain-soaked world of Jaymee Gray.
Karen L. Abrahamson, writes in almost every genre to take readers into other times, exotic places, and settings that are figments of her prodigious imagination. Whether writing a modern-day mystery, a fantasy set in an alternate world, or romance involving ghosts, psychics or occult possession, many of her novels feature women’s adventures and sensuous romance with strong, passionate male and female protagonists. Karen’s work has been described by national bestselling and top five romance author of the year, M.L. Buchman as having “connection to culture and … powerful characters (that) make an incredible story.”
Her bestselling Cartographer urban fantasy series features Vallon Drake, secret agent of the American Geological Survey, keeping America safe from domestic and international terrorist magicians who can rewrite the country simply by redrawing the map.
About her UNLOCKING, romantic suspense series, Karen aims to give readers the same sense of family and place she got from reading Nora Robert’s Three Sisters Island or Blue Dahlia trilogies.
Writing as K.L. Abrahamson, Karen draws on her background in the criminal justice system to craft short stories and novels about amateur sleuths as well as police procedurals.
She lives on the west coast of Canada with bears, bald eagles and the ocean as neighbors.
Interesting premise, characters, lots of action (and sex). There is just nothing wrong with this book. If that was all it was, though, I probably would have blown it off. However, she gets into a lot of depth (but not preachiness) about the expectations that young women face. "Be what your lover wants you to be" isn't something that just empaths have to face. Philosophical meat to a catchy thriller. Very nice.